Startup Therapy

The challenging question of whether the sacrifices made in pursuit of entrepreneurial success are ultimately worth the payoff. Will retells his personal story of almost buying an expensive house in Bel Air only to realize, thanks to his wife's intervention, that it wasn't what he truly wanted. The duo explores themes of sacrifice, payoff, and how aligning personal goals with true desires can lead to genuine happiness and fulfillment. Whether it's the freedom to travel or the joy of creating something with your hands, this episode urges founders to carefully contemplate their end goals and ensure their sacrifices lead to meaningful rewards.

Resources:
Startup Therapy Podcast
https://www.startups.com/community/startup-therapy
Website
https://www.startups.com/begin
LinkedIn
https://www.linkedin.com/company/startups-co/

Join our Network of Top Founders
Wil Schroter
https://www.linkedin.com/in/wilschroter/
Ryan Rutan
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryan-rutan/

What to listen for:
00:25 The Beverly Hills House Dilemma
03:05 Reflecting on Sacrifices and Payoffs
06:52 The Decision to Move Back to Ohio
13:42 The Value of Freedom and Purpose
17:46 The Danger of Undefined Goals
22:15 The Illusion of Goals
23:19 Realizing Unwanted Desires
24:13 Shifting Ambitions
26:21 The Fear of Losing Ambition
27:54 Evaluating Sacrifices
33:48 Finding True Fulfillment
36:31 Building a Dream
42:38 Advice for Founders

What is Startup Therapy?

The "No BS" version of how startups are really built, taught by actual startup Founders who have lived through all of it. Hosts Wil Schroter and Ryan Rutan talk candidly about the intense struggles Founders face both personally and professionally as they try to turn their idea into something that will change the world.

Welcome back to another episode
of the Startup Therapy Podcast.

This is Ryan Rutan,
joined, as always by

my friend, the founder,
and CEO of startups.com.

Will Schroeder, will we get
to this point where we cash in

life's chips and then we wonder,
did we buy the right prize?

Right now, we've done
this story before.

I'm gonna ask you
to retell a story.

I want you to go back
to the moment in time.

You and Sarah in Beverly Hills
looking at Bel Air about to

buy a really expensive house.

Just walk us through again,
'cause we're gonna play around

with this in a different
context today, around will

the payoffs be worth it?

We've talked about are the
sacrifices worth it, but

will the sacrifice be worth
the payout today is we're

gonna talk about, so I want
you to take us back to that

moment where you're wrestling
with the thought that like.

I did all this stuff to get
to this moment so that I

could make this decision.

And then luckily, your,
your, your wife stepped in.

Yeah, usually of all my
life, my, my best of moments.

Uh, finish with, and then
luckily my wife stepped in.

Uh, you know, it's funny, y
yesterday I was at dinner with

one of our founder members
from startups.com, uh, that

I met through startups.com,
which is really cool, Uhhuh.

And we're at dinner and he hands
me a t-shirt and, uh, it's a

t-shirt he had made for me.

And it says, well, this
seems like a terrible idea.

What time?

Like that's, that's
the tagline of my life.

Jesus.

Uh, yes.

That's fantastic.

Yeah, it was, it was a
really cool gift and it's

so appropriate for this.

So we're going back a few
years now, and right now

I'm thinking about that.

That was six years ago.

Like, yeah, I was
thinking about this too.

'
cause that until you
said that, that felt

like very recent history.

But that was.

Six years ago,

so okay, we're, we're
going back six years.

My family and I had just
moved a few years prior

to that, to Los Angeles.

We ended up finding a house in
Beverly Hills and everyone's

like, oh, that's so foo.

You know, bougie guys
gonna Beverly Hills.

It was like our last choice.

It just happened to be where
we found a house Uhhuh.

But anyway, so.

We lived there for a few years.

We quickly outgrew the
house 'cause it was tiny.

And you know, my son Will
had just been born and we

needed more room, so we go
looking for another house.

Uh, my daughter had started
school in Beverly Hills.

She, she loved it and we wanted
to stay in that school district.

So we ended up finding a
house that was like 10 minutes

away, which if you don't
know your LA geography, uh,

Beverly Hills and Bel Air are
just two tiny towns, more or

less adjacent to each other.

That's where we find a house.

And I say this and it's
not like big time it being

Bel Air, literally, dude,
that just happens to be

where we find a house.

Um, I wasn't trying
to be the fresh Prince

of Bill there, right.

So, anyway, and I
mean, maybe, yeah.

I mean, it wouldn't
be the worst outcome.

We get to the, the finish
line with this house.

We go through, you know, the
negotiations and everything, and

it's, it's a big purchase right?

When we're on the goal line,
Sarah and I had, uh, been

on a, a, a quick vacation,
like a weekend vacation,

and, uh, we're sitting at
dinner on vacation in Mexico.

Sarah's like, kind of
sitting there going, you

know, this is probably a bad
idea because as you know,

she's the conservative one.

She's, everything for her
is, this is a bad idea and

everything for me is, this
seems like a terrible idea.

What time?

Right?

What time?

I'm so ready.

I agree.

It's a bad idea, but
we're gonna do it.

Yeah, exactly.

Yeah, that, that's literally
my job description.

Here's what I told her.

I said I. If we balk on
this, this is actually

a big problem for me.

And I said, you've gotta
understand, like I've been

working my entire life
sacrificing and risking nonstop.

I can't begin to tell
you how many sacrifices

I made to get here.

And she's been through many
of them, so she's aware.

Yeah,

like for the first six years
of my career, I didn't see my

family or celebrate a holiday.

I never came home for Christmas.

I remember I went to
other people's house for

Christmas because my family
was too far away to make

the travel and I had to be
able to come back in time.

And so those are pretty
significant sacrifices

that you don't get back.

Yeah.

You and I, Ryan, you and I
talked about it where like,

I don't remember college.

I

know I was there, but I
just worked through college.

Yeah, I remember, I remember
being in classrooms.

I remember being in big
office buildings and, and,

and selling, uh, you know,
enterprise level client stuff.

I don't remember, like,
you know, I learned to play

beer pong when I was like.

30 in Cyprus,

like I I, I've never been
little arrested development.

I've never hung out on
the quad, so to speak.

Like I, college just happened
to be an address that I

had while I was working.

Okay.

Yeah.

I'm, I'm nonstop sacrifice.

And then so many things that
come with it, with building

your own company and the
sacrifice, the things that

every single person listening
to this inherently understands.

Okay.

So when you make all those
sacrifices, we make them

with the expectation that
there will be a payout.

Every time.

I feel like it's a little
promise that you make to

yourself when you make that
sacrifice that it's okay,

because I'll pay it back later.

It's okay, because I'll get more

later.

But we don't actually
know if that's true.

We don't.

We treat, we treat sacrifice
like it's a savings account.

Mm-hmm.

Right?

But we never check the
balance or the terms.

Right?

Like, so when do I
get to withdraw it?

N never.

Never.

Right?

It doesn't work that way.

Well stick with that.

Yeah.

There's no interest said
this before in the podcast.

I must say it again.

There is no interest
earned on happiness

deferred or life deferred.

It doesn't come back tenfold
later just because you gave it

up now sometimes it does, right?

You might get a
big pat at the end.

You might.

It's not like a guarantee.

There's, there's
no just automatic

compounding in this one

isn't.

This episode isn't so much,
I think about the sacrifice

as it is for the payout.

Let's assume the
sacrifice was significant.

The question in this episode
is, is there a payout that

could match the sacrifice?

Sure.

And, and I think there's an
assumption that there is.

So here's what happened
to me in this case.

So, uh, we're sitting there and
my whole thing was like, look,

if I don't cash these chips in
now, this was the moment, like

there was clearly, this was the
moment where it was gonna be the

biggest purchase of our lives.

It was, you know, this, this
beautiful house in, in Bel Air.

Like it was, it was exactly what
you dream of being able to do

if you make those sacrifices,
if you take those risks, right?

So this was clearly
the moment to me.

It was something extraordinary
that put the extraordinary

sacrifice into some level of
balance to the extent, extent

that we can quantify either.

As soon as you said that,
Ryan, I just thought

of something else.

It made me think about it.

I gotta say, up until
that point, and not that

I never thought about it.

Oh, you know what, it's, I
never quantified the sacrifice

before the quantification.

That's the, that's
the challenge, right?

If I started just brainstorming
and I were to say, here are

all the major things that
I missed that I will never

get back my twenties, yep.

Et cetera, if I was gonna
make that sacrifice, if I was

gonna make that investment.

This is the time to,
to, to pay it out.

So then the question
was, was it worth it?

Right.

And what, uh, Sarah ends
up saying, she's like,

it's not, she's like,
this is a huge rip off.

Right.

You know, relative to what we're
paying and what we're getting.

It's ridiculous.

And I was like, yeah, but if, if
I don't cash my chips in, like

this is a huge problem for me.

And she says to me, she
says, you know what?

The whole point of that
wasn't that you have to

cash your chips in now.

It's that you had chips
to cash in at all.

Yeah.

So you don't have to cash
them in now, find another

way to cash 'em in.

Yeah.

And based on that
argument, we both agreed

right there, fuck it.

We're out and we moved back
to Columbus a week later.

Yeah.

So I mean like as quickly
as we tried to get into that

decision, we looked at it
and we said, you know what?

Different direction.

And we

bailed and we
moved back to Ohio.

Yeah.

And you know what?

Six years later, I have never
heard you say not a single time.

A single thing about,
oh, you know what?

I miss our ability to do this.

Or I miss when I, whatever.

Right.

Like, I miss running past
all 12 of Channing Tatum's

abs, uh, on my morning jog.

Right.

Or whatever the hell it was.

Right.

Yeah.

I haven't heard you say it.

Not a once.

I

don't,

I'm sure my wife
does, but I feel

very differently about his ads.

I heard he's down
to a 10 pack now

that he's given.

Yeah, yeah.

Exactly.

Exactly.

But what, what was
interesting for me.

I was forced to confront
whether or not the sacrifice

that we all take on.

Yeah.

Aligned with a payout.

And I think what's interesting
is, is that for many of us, the

sacrifice comes natural, but
we don't really always know how

this payout's going to work.

Right, sure.

Right.

When you look back and you
look, uh, actually, you

know, let me ask you this.

Recently, you just
moved to Madrid.

You guys just went to
Valencia as a family.

Was there a moment
where you were like,

this is extraordinary?

It does.

Yeah.

Holy cow here.

Yeah.

And then we're here.

Then reflect on the
sacrifice to get there.

Yes.

And you reflect on the
sacrifice and you go.

This was worth it.

This feels in balance.

I think there's, there's
something extremely important

in all of that, which is that
like, I didn't buy Valencia,

I just experienced it.

Right, right.

Be because I think to some
degree we do end up like

aligning because we don't, we
don't define extraordinary well.

Like we had an extraordinary
time in Valencia.

It was amazing.

A couple days at the beach,
couple days at the museums.

Like really, really just had a
great time, uh, with the family.

But we don't clearly define
extraordinary in a lot of cases.

And then the default
just becomes.

More and more is never enough.

And I think we get to this
point where it's like,

you know, big purchase
equals big purpose, right?

So this is, I have to do
this in a, in a one-off.

I have to balance the scales.

Yeah.

The scales of sacrifice are
completely tipped to the floor.

I've gotta, I gotta do
something to balance this out.

I think that what I'm
finding over time is that

instead of looking for
that singular payout, I'm

treating it more like.

A line of equity, right?

Where I can just constantly
make daily withdrawals and

just draw down and just
enjoy and do the things.

And I get it though, like
when you were sitting there

at that dinner in Mexico,
thinking about the Bel Air

House, you weren't defending
a decision around a house.

You were defending the
meaning of 30 years of work.

Let's build on that.

'cause again, in this episode
we're talking about the payout.

What if up until that point.

I had just assumed
that was the payout.

You know, maybe, maybe my vision
of it wasn't quite that crystal

clear that it was exactly the
street in Bel Air, you know?

Sure thing.

But that was a, a very
visceral like feeling to be

walking into this beautiful
house in Bel Air and be able

to say, I can afford this.

I came from a place where
there's no way I, I, I couldn't

have afforded to rent out the
driveway and, and get to a

point where I'm like, okay,
it's a lot of money, but I, but,

but I could make this happen.

But then part of me was
like, okay, I made all those

sacrifices so I could be able
to say that, but was this

really what I had in mind
was this specifically it?

And it turned out, and
again, this, this is,

we'll get to this later.

It wasn't it.

And that, that
terrified me more.

Because for a while I was

like, well, what just happened?

I think part, part of the,
what we, we end up going

through is that we look for
these things that will be

obvious signals that, that
there was a return, right?

That again, people have seen
the sacrifices or maybe not,

but we've done the sacrifices
and so we want the world

to know that it was worth
it and so we did something.

And so I think oftentimes
some of the decisions I've

become close to making or like
things that would've been a

good signal to everybody else
instead of what I wanted.

That it was really geared
towards like this'll be a good

signal that I did well, right?

This big purchase will will
signal that, yes, I did it

to everybody else, but then I
looked at it and went like, but

do I actually care about that?

Do I actually want that?

And in your case, like, thank
God you didn't buy that house.

Right?

It's interesting to me
because we all put it

in the sacrifice, right?

Again, we all understand
the sacrifice.

What we never can quantify
is what's the rate of

pay for that sacrifice.

Sure, sure.

Now the, the rate of pay
is directly proportionate

to what you think your
payout's going to be.

Okay?

Yeah.

So in other words, if it's
like I'm gonna sacrifice, you

know, a crazy amount of time,
so I can buy a $10 million

house in Bel Air, then there's
some rate of pay of sacrifice

that like that aligns there.

But if you have no idea
what that outcome is, you

then also have no idea
what your rate of pay is.

And I'm not saying it has to
be that proportionate, but I'm

saying when you have no outcome.

You, you like, or it's
just too amorphous.

Like you can't
define the outcome.

You're like, I just want
things to be better.

You're screwed.

Because then your rate of pay
could be literally anything.

And the, the example I use
is like, imagine you've

got your first job, right?

And you know, whatever your
crappy first job is, your bag

groceries, your, you know, uh,
mow mowing lawns, you know,

shoveling driveways, whatever.

And after your first two weeks,
your boss comes to you and

says, thanks for everything.

Here's 28 cents.

You're like, what the hell?

I just worked nonstop.

I sweated like crazy
for two weeks and that

was my rate of pay.

That's essentially what happens
when you don't have a payout

that aligns with the sacrifice.

So I was gonna say like I think
that's the, the challenge around

having those big goals, and
I think the other thing that

ends up doing that is that
we make the sacrifices across

such a long period of time.

Yeah.

And most of them are
absolutely meaningful.

But they're very
justifiable in a moment.

Yeah,

because that does
get paid out, right?

That those are absolutely
paid day by day, by

day, by day by day.

You don't write a big sacrifice,
check at the beginning,

and then earn the payout.

You, you pay as you
go consistently.

And again, when you don't
have, when you got that, that

big blurry goal out there.

And like, let's, let's dig
into this for a second.

'cause like, what's the
most common, like vague or

blurry gold that, that you
hear freedom, impact, time?

Like what are you hearing
from other founders?

Well, okay, you know, it's
funny you say, 'cause as

you were talking I was
like, you, you were talking

about what your payout was,
you know, throughout this.

And I was thinking your
payout, you're being, a lot

of people's mind included, was
the freedom to go to Valencia

was the, the freedom, all of
which you've earned, right?

You know, which is the point
of the sacrifice, the freedom

to, to do a job that you enjoy.

Versus having to take
a job that you hate.

All of these things
are incredible payouts.

They don't all involve
a giant house, right.

Or a private jet, but they
are incredible payouts.

Uh, peace of mind,
pride of work.

I mean, there's, there's a
really long list of somewhat

intangibles, but take them away.

There's no value to it.

Right?

In other words, it's so, so
important For me, I always

used to say the same thing
if you paid me 10 times more

than I make right now, but
you say, the only caveat

is you now have a boss.

Not interested.

There's literally
nothing I could buy.

Not 'cause I'm so
wealthy, I'm not.

But there's nothing you
could buy for 10 times more

for me that would outweigh
having an answer to someone.

It's kind of just that simple.

I value that freedom as
a tremendous part of the

sacrifice in the payout.

I think that once you
understand how to use it,

it's one of those where I
hear that and I do, I get it.

I totally understand it, but
I think that there's, there's

a challenge around some of
those as well, because when

the goal is amorphous, then
again, like you don't know

what your rate to pay is.

Right.

If, if you're saying
like, I'll get Yeah.

Paid.

We don't know how much
or freedom of what sort.

Right.

And with what are
the restrictions.

So I think it's just, it's super
important to just have some kind

of a goal or, or, or maybe not.

Right.

And maybe, maybe that
is the other side.

It's like, because I think
if you had picked, because we

see that happen too, right.

And we've, we've done an
entire episode on like play

testing some of your dreams.

Which you did in la,
which I did in Florida.

And we, we, we come to find out
like retirement's definitely not

what we're aiming for, right?

That isn't a goal that
we actually wanted.

And so I think there's an
interesting danger around,

like the clear definition of
the goal can also lead to its

own level of disappointment.

Because if you thought the
only thing you had in mind

was like, I need that house,
and if I don't get that house,

then, then it doesn't work.

And then you get to that
point and then you decide.

Actually, I don't want
to need of that house.

Did you feel like you were
in a vacuum at that point?

For a minute.

Huge.

Okay, so let's, let's

talk about that.

Yeah.

It fucked me up for a while.

I'll bet.

Because I didn't
have, I remember.

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

I didn't have a, like, once
you took that finish line

or that trophy or, you know,
however ever you want to,

uh, attack it off the table.

I was like, I can't one up that.

In other words, if that's not
what I'm looking for, then

what the hell just happen?

And I wasn't like, oh, that's
cool, I'll just go on a cool

vacation and, and that'll be,
you know, it was all worth it.

Damn.

It was the first time where
I had to really second guess

whether this was all worth it.

When you don't have shit,
you can always say, when

I get said stuff that I
don't have, that it will fix

current problem, whatever
your current problem is.

I mean, it is, it is the bane.

Of every, every marriage,
it's, well when we just fix

this one thing, Uhhuh, right?

Usually it's money.

Then marriage will be great.

It almost never works,

right?

Had this conversation with
the founder today, not

about marriage, but just
about like the desire for

an exit and saying like,
oh, well, once I don't have

the stress of this business,
then life will be better.

I'm like, remember that?

Like you're creating a lot
of this stress within the

business, and so if you think
that you won't somehow find a

way to create similar stress
in your regular life when you

no longer have the business
probably misleading yourself.

You know, Ryan, as you know,
like every year in December,

I take the month off.

And I usually go
work more, but, uh,

I was gonna say, yeah, I
think you take the month

off is probably not that
you, you change to a more

rigorous type of work.

Yeah, I go work a harder job
and so it usually involves

a lot of sawdust and uh, in
sweat when I'm doing that job.

Right, and I'm, I'm building
stuff and again, I'm,

I'm not working this job.

The startups.com job,
within a couple days.

I think I've told you this
before, like at first I'm so

excited to be able to do that.

'cause it's my passion.

I, you know, I love building
things, but after a few days

I'm like, dude, this is really
hard work and I'm not against

hard work, but I'm like, but if
I had to do this for the rest of

my life, this would not be fun.

This would not be fun.

And so usually by the time
that month elapses, which is

my version of a vacation, um,
I can't wait to get back to

startups.com and I have so much
more appreciation in my job.

But, but, but I say that to
say it helps me quantify the

value of this job, the value
of this sacrifice, because

I, I, I get to step away from
it for a while and then, you

know, kind of see it for the
first time and then kind of

come back to it and like, oh,
damn, this was totally worth it.

Which, I mean, just being
able to step away from it is

one of the, the, the payouts
from the sacrifice, right?

The, the fact that you built
a business, you can step

away from for a minute,

but I wanna talk about fearing
the goal a little bit because

I, I think that's fascinating
to me because I, I've dealt

with it quite a bit and I
certainly see it with other

founders fearing the goal
that, the way I would define

it looks something like this.

It either means you never
really defined the goal.

So, and, and maybe
subconsciously you didn't

really define what your end
game goals were because you were

afraid of what they might be.

Uh, either too small,
too big, whatever.

Or the other side of it is
you named something Bel Air

House, that when it came to
fruition, wound up being a bust.

That's even more
terrifying because you

were so sure that was it.

And then you got there.

It's just what you said about
the founder with the exit.

Every founder thinks
the exit's the answer.

Once I get exit, everything
gets better, everything

will be different,
everything will be better.

And then always become
depress depressed after

having done it because they
lost their sense of purpose.

They, you name it, the list
go whole episodes dedicated

to to the after effect.

And I guess what I'm saying
there is what's interesting

to me about folks who,
with a lack of, of defined

goals, is they have no way
to calibrate the sacrifice.

For example, if your
ultimate goal, Ryan, was

to just go to Madrid.

Forget all the job
benefits, right?

Of what we do and our
freedom and stuff like that.

Just, just to get there.

There'd be a million paths
that you could go on that

wouldn't, ma wouldn't
require any sacrifice.

You could literally just
get a job in Madrid and

accomplish that goal.

But your goals aren't
that subtle, right?

Or specific.

In this case, they're broader.

You not just wanna be there.

You wanna have the freedom,
you want to have, um,

enough cash to be able to
do the things you wanna do.

You know, you're not
living in a hobble.

There's a lot more to it.

And those things
require, uh, sacrifice.

And execution, all those things.

And I think about that and
I'm like, if you don't know

exactly what those things
are though, like all of those

things that are important to
you, then you're many cases

gonna over sacrifice you.

You're gonna like invest too
much for shit you don't need

for stuff you don't need.

Yeah.

Or invest the wrong way.

Right.

You're gonna, you're gonna
push towards things that

you didn't absolutely need
and, and forego others that

you, you would've enjoyed.

Yeah.

I feel like, you know, in,
in the founder space that.

Ambiguity is, is ambitions,
comfort food, right?

The, the idea that if we keep
the goals amorphous, love that.

I love that.

That we can just sort of
like, just keep going.

Keep it like we can just keep
feeding the beast that we

know how to feed, uh, without
really having to answer these

questions and face the fear of
the payout, the what if, right?

Like right.

Because with the fuzzy goal, we,
we, we can't be disappointed.

The challenge comes right to
your point, like you didn't

know exactly which house, but
you sort of thought there was

some version of this thing that
you wanted to do, and so you,

you couldn't be disappointed.

But then when you get there
and you realize now does come

time for this very specific
moment, like leading up to it,

it was just like, I'll just
chase, I'll chase, I'll chase.

Right?

Feed the ambition, feed the
ambition, feed the ambition.

When it comes time to eat
that meal, and you just go,

I actually don't want this.

We also can't be satisfied.

So I think that's
the, the real danger.

Around giving into the fear
of some level of definition.

Is that right?

We, we can't be disappointed
by a fuzzy goal, but we also

can't be satisfied by it.

Let's stick with that.

That's why when we say
founders selling their company,

getting the exit, which
everybody thinks is the goal.

They get it and then
they're pissed off about it.

Uh, and again, just for folks
that, that weren't familiar with

this, this the episodes we've
done about this, that the high

level version is we sell our
company and we lose our purpose.

And we realized at that
moment how much our purpose

was, was worthwhile to us
and then it's too late.

Our purpose being what we
were building, that company,

our relationships with
people, how we were getting

up in the morning, we knew
exactly what to do, et cetera.

When you overnight strip
all that away and you're

like, but it doesn't matter
'cause now I don't have to

worry 'cause I have money.

And now you have
no reason to go.

You have no purpose
in many cases.

And people be like, oh,
well I'll have purpose.

I'll do charity, I'll do this.

I'll, I'll work out a lot.

I'll like, dude, yeah.

Try it.

Lemme how this, there'll be

high quality problems.

Yeah, yeah,

yeah, yeah.

It's a problem.

Um, and you'll be talking
to your therapist about it.

My point is, it's one of those
cases where when we define that

goal that I want exit, so I
have money, so I have options.

Totally get that part.

Yeah.

Then what?

Right.

What comes after that goal?

No one thinks about what
comes after that goal.

It's because we're so,
we're working so hard

just to get there.

Right?

We don't plan that far ahead.

But what happens is when
we don't plan any further

than that goal, we never
play out that exercise.

We never say, I
wanna get to an exit.

Okay, cool.

And we talk to founders
about this all the time.

Awesome.

If that's what you want, great.

But let's talk about what's
going to happen after that exit.

Yep.

And make sure that those things
are actually what you want.

And once happen, then once
we start chipping away at

'em, they're like, huh, I
really would've nothing to do.

You could always say, I'll
start another company,

which is what everybody
does for this exact reason.

Or, or you're like, well,
you know, a big part of

my social life maybe.

Was wrapped up in, in, in
running a company, um, either

explicitly with like, these
are people that I hang out with

and we go get drinks together.

Or implicitly, like, I have
a lot more to talk about

with a lot more people 'cause
we have the commonality of

being founders or whatever.

And I think what's interesting
about that is when you

play these goals out.

When you really kind of
play these goals out,

they're not always exactly
what people wanted or they

don't solve the problems.

Rarely are they
what people wanted.

Isn't that weird?

It is.

You know, something that's
really funny about everything

we talk about here is
that none of it is new.

Everything you're dealing
with right now has been done a

thousand times before you, which
means the answer already exists.

You may just not know it.

But that's okay.

That's kind of what
we're here to do.

We talk about this stuff on
the show, but we actually

solve these problems all
dayLong@groups.startups.com.

So if any of this sounds
familiar, stop guessing

about what to do, let us just
give you the answers to the

test and be done with it.

It sparked another thought
though, which is, was there a

point at which this happened
to you or you realized

this was happening to you?

You were avoiding
precision around the goal.

Yeah, because you actually
didn't want the answer.

They came in

a different way and this
happened maybe Brian, maybe

in the last year or so.

I think maybe in the last
year or so, for the first

time in my life, I realize
there's things I don't want,

and I don't want that to sound
like this privileged first

world problem because it's,
it was really disappointing.

Decided I didn't need
the third Bentley.

Exactly, exactly right.

I had so much, you know?

Yeah, no, nothing like that.

A big part of what drove my
ambition was not having shit.

Yeah.

A big part of that need was
because I didn't have it.

Right.

And I've, I, I've said this
before, I said, you know,

the value of anything is the
fact that you don't have it.

But once you do, it drops value,
you know, uh, exponentially.

Immediately.

And so I say that to say for
the first time in my life,

all those big honking goals
that I had just started

to be like, I actually
don't want those things.

I want the idea of wanting,
I'll give an example, right?

I do not want a yacht.

Now most people are like,
oh, well you know, how could

you not want a yacht or
like, you know, who cares?

That's ridiculous.

I don't give a shit.

What I'm saying is like I
actually don't enjoy boats

whatsoever and I'm anti boat.

Right.

If you've got a boat,
let's get on it.

You use it four
times as I recall.

Yeah.

But I have no interest
whatsoever in being yacht guy.

I respect somebody else
for being yacht guy.

I don't wanna be
ya guy right now.

When I say that, that
means I'm taking some big

further goal that would
otherwise require lots of

extra sacrifice to get to.

Off the table for a decade.

We had two homes, right?

We had one in Ohio,
we one in California.

I have no desire to
have a second home.

I don't even have a 1%
desire to have a second home.

I hated having two homes, right?

It was a giant pain in the ass.

But when I say that, I,
I'm, I feel fortunate that,

that I had that experience.

But I can also tell you, I
don't ever wanna do that again.

That takes a huge, you know,
uh, thing off the table.

Huge.

And I, I think it comes from
these places so often, right?

Like in your case it came
from, from not having and then

wanting to have, and then we
forget that we can shift outta

that gear at some point, right?

When it's just like, didn't
have, and just like, so the

answer to that is, again, it's,
it's have more, it's funny.

Yeah.

I don't want a second
home right now.

What I do want is a
big table somewhere.

It's not gonna fit in my
Madrid apartment, right?

It is not.

There's no room in this
place for a big table.

What's a big table look like?

I realized the other day, one
of the things I do miss is

a big outdoor table uhhuh,
where I can gather a bunch of

friends, I can cook some good
food, and we can sit down and

have a nice meal together.

And so at some point.

I want a big table again,
but like, it's a pretty

simple flipping goal, right?

Right.

Like, I don't need,
I don't need, like, I

don't need miles of land.

I need like, you know, a a
a couple hundred meters and

uh, and a big table outside
somewhere that I can get to

within a, a reasonable amount of
time and go and cook over fire.

Whatever it is I like to do out
there that I want, I do, I still

want that, but like, yep, that's
insanely achievable, right?

That's not, I don't
need an exit for that.

I need.

He'd probably had a plan for
three weeks and then figure that

out.

Yeah.

Well, okay, so, but this is what
I mean by by that fear though.

The fear of the goal.

Yeah.

Once I started taking things
off of my list, my fear started

to go the other direction.

I'm like, well, if I take my
wants off the list, doesn't

my ambition go with that?

If you don't have a bunch of,
you know, big ticket items

or, you know, whatever your,
your, your list is, I'm just,

I'm naming random stuff.

Then all of a sudden, aren't
you, ambitionless are like,

isn't the the best person,
the old school, Gordon

Gecko, that you know, the
only answer to more is more.

And I'm like, I ran that
path for a very long time.

Long enough to know that
it is soulless at best

and destructive at worst.

Yeah, yeah, for sure.

Every time I got thing it became
exponentially of less value

than the next thing and the
next thing and the next thing.

We've talked about this before
and I think I started to fear

that part, Ryan, I started to
fear that like, what if I hit

this threshold where there's
just nothing else I want?

Do I lose all my ambition?

Does my superpower of
of ambition directly

correlate to having random
shit that I don't need?

As we get older and wiser, we
start to realize we can have

more of certain things that,
that don't come at the cost

of, of other types of things.

Right?

Right.

More houses comes at a cost
more impact to startup founders.

Doesn't necessarily, and
you and I are both highly

motivated by that, right?

We're still very ambitious
in terms of wanting

to solve problems for,
for, for our people.

And so I think that at some
point you do start to just

kind of shift what, what
some of those things look

like and the the, the payoff
starts to look very different.

Right, and, and the sacrifice
start to balance out a period

we have to ask, is
the payout worth it?

And I think maybe the
scariest thing is being

confronted with that answer.

I'll give you an example.

Before I started, uh, my
first company, I used to

work for a big law firm.

Called Jones Day Re and po.

Mm-hmm.

Know them well.

Yeah.

And so, uh, I'm personally
for the wrong reasons.

Yeah.

So I, I worked there at
the lowest position you

could possibly have.

I was the backup receptionist.

Okay.

I'm 18 years old, just,
just because I, I have

to paint this portrait.

This is like 1993 ish, you know,
I got my dates right and because

I didn't own a car back then.

I used to get in my
like three piece suit.

Nobody wore three piece
suits even back then, right?

It was the only thing I
could find a goodwill.

I'm gonna stop

you.

Please tell me.

This involves roller

blades.

It involved roller blades.

Not only did it involve
roller blades, I was so

late for business, right?

It involved a a suit
roller blades, a briefcase.

You are that stock image that
became I am the stock image.

Right?

Oh my gods.

And for those of you that aren't
following, there's a famous meme

in stock image, uh, of a, of a
businessman, rollerblading, and

it says, I'm late for business.

And I actually was that guy.

So I was, I was way ahead of
the curve anyway, so I would

rollerblade to the shitty job.

It was far away, by the
way, like I was on campus.

That was in downtown Columbus.

Yeah, that's a, that's a, that's
a good, a long, long knock.

It's a good role.

That's, that's a lot of role.

But anyway, so I'd go to this
job and, uh, every day I'm

answering phones and I'm,
I'm like, you know, kind

of like chatting with the
attorneys and stuff like that.

And on my last day there, the
managing partner comes out.

I didn't even know
he knew who I was.

He's like one, like
such a sweet guy.

And, uh, he's like, Hey,
will again, I didn't even

know how he knew my name.

He's like, uh, I heard
it's your last day.

Also.

Not sure how he knew that.

He's like, would it be okay
if I took you to lunch?

I'm like, wow, that's the
coolest thing I've ever heard.

I mean like just
such a cool move.

That guy, you know, massive
influence in what he was

in and he took the time
to take the fucking backup

receptionist out to to lunch.

Right.

The fact that he's a
backup receptionist.

Yeah, I know.

I know, I know.

And so, so we're at lunch.

And we're talking about life
and everything else like that.

And I'm like 18, 19 years old.

And I said to him, I said, Hey,
I have to ask you like you are

at the top of this food chain.

Was it worth it?

Which in retrospect
was like a pretty deep

question to ask this guy.

Yeah.

Right.

Who I don't even know.

Right.

But you know, me, I just, I
just go all the way at all these

questions and, uh, he paused
and he was like, not really.

And I thought that was like
this incredibly honest answer.

Great answer.

And he says, honest answer.

Here's, here's
what he said to me.

He said, well, when I
go to Best Buy, I can

now buy any TV I want.

And I thought that was such
a specific thing to say.

Right, right.

This

is also 1992.

Clearly, clearly at some
point he didn't have a tv.

He wanted,

I

could

buy any tube TV I want
in the nicest VCR.

Yes.

And, but I remember he said
that specifically, he said,

but what it took to get that,
you know, to be able to, to

make that wasn't worth it.

This is the guy that was
the managing partner.

Right?

Like, like he was the guy.

Like that's a, and
he was a young age.

It wasn't He could
have, right, right.

There wasn't a bigger goal.

There wasn't a bigger payout
that could have been had.

Correct.

He got the biggest payout

and I remember, and the
sacrifice wasn't worth it when

he said that, and I was like.

How is that po I was expecting
a totally different answer.

Okay.

I was expecting a hype video
where he was like, well, son,

now that you've asked, you
know, in order to become blah.

And like, I thought it
was, and he was so honest,

and so clear and so kind.

And I was like, I,
I'd never forgot that.

I never forgot that.

And over time, when I was
looking at my goals and my

sacrifices, I kept thinking,
I don't wanna be that guy.

Like, I'm so terrified of being
at the top of my, my food chain

in, in having that answer.

And I, I think part of that for
him, different era, different

generation, et cetera, you
weren't allowed to ask if

the payout was worth it.

It was like if you
had the payout at all.

This is again,
different generation

Yeah.

Than

you didn't otherwise work in a
factory, so go fuck yourself.

That's your payout.

Right?

Right.

Like you didn't get the
luxury of evaluating it

in quite the same way.

Like he wasn't saying,
Hey, it wasn't worth it and

I'm gonna quit tomorrow.

He was like, yeah, it
wasn't worth it and this is

what I'm gonna do through
the rest of my life, but

this is what I've got now.

Which to me felt like
a death sentence.

And so, um, a well
paying death sentence.

But, but my point is
he did contemplate

whether it was worth it.

This guy did everything right.

You know, top law schools,
you know, obviously

worked insane hours.

His, I, I can't even quantify
what his sacrifice must

have been to get there.

He probably can't either, right?

Yeah, right.

Trade offs don't
come with receipts.

X years.

Why miss moments Z dollars?

Think about right.

He might be the only person
that actually can, 'cause he

had a timecard for all of that.

He could.

That's probably run report tell
you exactly how many hours.

That's true.

That's true.

But, but I guess like it's so
rare that we are forced to stop

and evaluate and calculate.

Yeah.

Whether this was worth it
in the fear in all of us,

just terrifies all of us.

I know.

It does me is that
we get to that moment

and give that answer.

Yeah, because man, winning,
winning the wrong prize

is just another version of
losing and, and the idea

that we've, we've done all of
this just to open that door

and like that's not what I
wanted is it's terrifying.

You see this in many
professions, it's

certainly not unique to,
to being a founder, right?

That require a, a, a
tremendous amount of sacrifice.

Lawyer's a great example, right?

Like it's, it's hard to get
that far in a firm like that

and not kill yourself to do
it at every possible level for

an extraordinarily long time.

Uh, doctors are the same way.

You know, the gauntlet that
they have to go through just

to start practicing is bananas.

But for founders.

What's different for us
is we don't know if we're

gonna get paid at all.

What they're saying is lawyers,
uh, doctors, et cetera, is, I

don't know if it'll be worth
it, but I'm going to get paid.

Ours is, I don't know if
it'll worth it, and I don't

know if I'm gonna get paid
and I don't have paid.

Yeah, it's a double whammy.

Uh, we sound unreasonable
when you say it that way.

Will we sound?

What's that?

You're unreasonable,
but let's talk about the

other side of the coin.

I wanna kind of wrap
with this, this concept.

What if we did get it right?

What if after all
of this sacrifice.

We have that moment, you
know, you and Valencia,

me building my house where
it's like, you know what,

this is pretty dope, right?

Yeah.

Like this, uh, this
worked out awfully well.

That's what we're hoping for.

I see it happen a lot less.

I think I fell into mine.

Do you feel like
you're there now?

Do you feel like you have that
alignment we were sacrificing

in your payoff have, I think so.

At, at the current state it
feels like that, but this is

still a very new, new part
of the adventure for us.

We're at a pretty dynamic
spot in terms of like where

the kids are at in life and
all of that to kind of see

how, how that plays out.

'cause this, this leads to some,
some big unknowns for us, right?

Which is like, we've now
created these three little very

internationalized people, so.

What happens like as we get
into our, and past our, our

mid age into our older age?

Like, are they just gone?

Are they like,
what have we done?

Right, right.

Is this for difficulties later?

Like, will that payoff
be, be, be worth it?

But I think in terms of the
balance we're looking for

in life, the time freedom
that we wanted, the ways to

enjoy our days, spend our
time, and look for like daily

meaningful returns on that.

I can't imagine anything that
had a better alignment right

now than, than what we're doing.

Um, and I think that's an
important piece of this is

like, how do we turn that?

You know, when when you do
find that alignment and I

think you, you end up being
a bit more, I don't wanna

say reasonable, reasonable is
the wrong word, but there's,

there's, I'm missing, I'm
missing the, the vocabulary for

it, but this kind of alignment
turns someday into today.

And I think, I think that
that's a great way to put,

think that's important because,
because if you were still like,

you know what, like building
this house isn't enough.

I need to build a three
times larger house.

I need to wait longer.

I need to sacrifice more so I
can build a like, then it just

continues to stay someday.

And I think that there's really
something to this, which is

like, for me, peace isn't
purchased, it's specified.

Yeah.

Right.

Meaning that once I'm able
to decide that like this

is actually the thing.

And it's, and it's what
I want then, then this

is that, that's great.

Right?

Like for you, your
goal wasn't jets.

It turned out to
be a, a workshop.

This is where I, I wanna say
like, I didn't, when I, I,

when I said reasonable, I
don't mean that in terms of

it's smaller, it's truer.

It's more real to what,
like you actually want to

do more fidelity to it.

Right.

It's, it, it's with reason.

Right.

With reason and purpose.

It's with reason
reasonable in that sense.

Right.

Yeah.

Not, not reasonable and like,
oh, well that's achievable.

Right.

You know, if you can't buy
the Ferrari, uh, you know, buy

the, the, the matchbox version,
it's nearly the same thing.

Be satisfied.

It's, that's not it at all.

Yeah.

It was that when you got
down to what was actually

going to move your needle,
it turned out it was that.

Yeah.

And that alignment
is super powerful.

It, I didn't see it coming.

So for folks listening,
essentially what happened

was, uh, we ended up
moving back to Ohio.

Uh, we were initially going
to, uh, remodel our house, uh,

that we don't own for 20 years.

And as I started getting like
the costs and like whatever,

and I said to my wife's, like,
you know, for, for what it

would cost to remodel this whole
house, we could just build a new

house and for the same amount
of money, just have a new.

That was the last
time that was true.

And so, yeah, I was gonna say,
I feel like there may have

been some scope creep somewhere
along the Yeah, yeah, yeah.

An epic amount of scope creep.

So, but actually, but that
all kind of ties into it.

So lemme just play
this thought out.

I ended up going through this
process where we find some land

and I start designing a house.

You know, I learned 3D modeling.

So I learned how to design
a house, uh, which was the

most dangerous part of this.

'cause it cost nothing
to draw a bigger box.

It's building the bigger
box that, that, that it also

takes some time to realize.

How big those boxes are in
real life compared to what

they felt like in the 3D model.

I've experie, like
when I showed you

the 3D model like four years
ago and I was like, Hey Ryan, I

really wanna build this thing.

And then when you
walked through it.

And you were like, damn,
I'm in your 3D model.

Like it

was, I'm in the 3D model.

Like, I literally, like, there
was like, I, I knew which way

to turn when we walked from the
living room to head like towards

the workshop, I was like, I
know exactly where we're going.

Know what?

I've

done this.

You know what, it's,
you've been through this

fir first person shooter.

Before

it was, I literally, I
had an Xbox controller in

my hand and I was, I was
navigating your home with that.

So it did feel weird app to
use my feet, but I'll get over.

Yeah.

There's a, um, uh, this is
the most bizarre side, but,

uh, maybe you'll appreciate
this in the game fallout

for, for the gamers of you
out there, Uhhuh, right.

One of the Fallout series
takes you to a resort called

Greenbriar, and I think it's
the open world fallout, if

I'm not, not mistaken, right?

But they, they, uh, Greenbriar
is a resort in West Virginia.

I've been to the
Real Green Briar.

I have not been to the, the
Fallout version, but now

I'm super excited because.

There is a nuclear
shelter there.

That's why it's there.

There is, right.

And, and so, uh, in the game
they turned Greenbriar into

like, it doesn't matter.

But point is when I went
to Greenbrier for the

first time, I actually
knew where everything was.

'cause I had played the game.

Right?

It was bizarre.

I mean, it wasn't one for one,
but it funny was pretty close.

Anyway, huge engine.

Um, but you're
welcome Fallout fans.

So we get to the point where
like, you know, I'm, I'm kinda

like, you know, designing this
house or whatever, and something

really interesting happens.

I start to realize that
this is what I wanted.

It wasn't, here's what it is.

I didn't wanna buy a house.

I wanted to create a house.

I, I wanted to create something
where every single thing

had my fingerprint on it.

I wanted to design every square
inch of the house myself.

I wanted to pick out every
last thing from like the,

the timber grid of wood we're
gonna use to the quality of

hinge we're gonna use, right?

Every single thing.

Every single thing.

But I also wanted to build
it with my hands, right?

And so.

About a year ago, give or take,
I'm driving to the job site.

It's freezing outside, right?

It's, we're in Ohio.

It's like, it, it couldn't
have been more than

like 15 degrees outside.

I'm in my pickup truck, I'm
driving out to the job site and

I'm gonna go, um, run speaker
cable long before you're ever

supposed to run speaker cable.

And I've got the biggest
smile on my face.

It's like six 30 in the morning.

It's cold and dark outside
and I've got a huge smile

on my face and I just, I
just noticed it while it was

happening and I was like.

What is wrong with me?

I'm like any rational person
on a Saturday at six 30 in

the morning, at the very least
would be sleeping, but the

last thing they would be doing
is racing to a construction

site to go put speaker cable
up when there's not even

a roof on the house yet.

But I realized this is what
I've always wanted to do.

Is what you wanna do.

Right?

Like that's, I'll never
forget, I'm sitting in the

cab of my truck by myself and
I'm freezing and I'm thinking

to myself, this is insane.

But Bel Air wasn't
what I wanted.

Right?

Bel Air was status, and
status is seductive.

Yeah.

But it was the craft of doing
it yourself that actually

actually satisfied you.

It's, it's such an
amazing finding.

It's been this amazing journey
for, uh, for me and, you know,

if, for those of you that know
me and have had to listen to me

drone on about this thing for
the last couple years, thank

you for your, your service.

But like, I, honestly, I
finally found something

that, that was worthy.

Of the sacrifice.

This gave me some funding
to do what I wanted.

It gave me the, the, the
freedom to do what I wanted.

There was just everything
finally paid off in a way

that for the first time in
my life, I actually felt

like it was a full payout.

Like I was, yeah, I was fully
aligned with my sacrifice.

And Ryan, it was a
huge sigh of relief.

All of a sudden,
you realize like.

That decision I didn't
make, it wasn't actually

the thing, right?

It's the things that I'm doing
now that, that are the thing.

Can you

imagine, Ryan, if someone like
32 years ago was like, Hey,

will, one day if you sacrifice
everything and give up all of

your relationships, you'll be
able to drive your construction

site, come a contractor

on your own construction
site, right?

Like, wait, you never saw

that coming?

But man, like, you know,
I'm a obsessive carpenter,

so like I, I got to build.

Everything I've ever
wanted to build with,

like, when I say no limits,
that's not entirely true.

There's always limits, but
like right, reasonable limits.

I get to do really
extraordinary things and I,

I wouldn't, there's no way
I would've been able to do

this on, on another path.

So it's very clear that this
was like a singular outcome.

But when I'm out there, like
I was out there, you know, I

told you this morning at six in
the morning, I'm, I'm putting,

uh, speakers in the ceilings
that actually do exist now.

I'm like, I'm
covered in drywall.

You know, I'm
covered in sawdust.

I'm sweating like crazy.

'cause in this case it's
90 degrees outside and

I'm like, I'm so happy.

I'm so incredibly happy.

'cause I find something
that, that aligns with

the sacrifice that, that
feels like, damn, this is,

this is what it was for.

No, it's, you know, when we,
we stop optimizing scale and

we start optimizing for savor.

Something really
special happens man.

Like we don't need more.

We need maybe fewer, but
certainly like deeper

and better experiences.

And I think that like that
absolutely does come with

experience and time, but
it also, of course, you had

to create the opportunity.

It comes from sacrifice.

Sacrifice creates the
conditions for it.

Now you're, you're out there,
you're building again with

meaning, which of course there's
a very strong metaphor here

between the house and another
startup, so Yeah, yeah, yeah.

It doesn't go unnoticed.

However, it seems like
a super, it aligned

well though, and so it does.

Here's what I would say.

I would say for founders
out there that are kind of

wrestling with this and we're
all wrestling with it, at some

level, there's, there's no
version where you can go through

this startup thing and have
no, never wonder whether the

sacrifice is gonna be worth it.

Or in many cases, know exactly
what the, the end game is, and

if you think you do awesome,
often when you get there,

it's not what you thought
it was, and that's okay.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Its part of the journey.

But here's what I would say.

If you're going to make this
sacrifice, commit to something

that you feel that you can
see and touch and taste, and

feel that if I can get this,
it's going to be worth it.

But the most important
part of that is why and

what happens after that?

Once I get that.

Then what happens?

You know when I wake up the next
day and I bought the thing, or

I've done the thing, whatever,
when I wake up the next day,

what is demonstrably better?

Because for all of us, if we
can't define that next thing,

if we can't figure out what the
rate of pay is going to be for

our sacrifice, then none of it
is ever worth it, and that is

the worst feeling about taking
everything you care about.

And put it into
essentially nothing.

So take that focus, take that
drive, take that sacrifice,

and make sure when it's time
to cash all those chips in

that you cash 'em out big and
you're smiling like we are.

'cause you've got that
perfect alignment.

Overthinking your startup
because you're going it alone.

You don't have to, and honestly,
you shouldn't because instead,

you can learn directly from
peers who've been in your shoes.

Connect with bootstrap
founders and the advisors

helping them win in the
startups.com community.

Check out the startups.com
community@www.startups.com

to see if it's for you.

Could be just the
thing you need.

I hope to see you inside.